Influence on early childhood development in low-income families Background information and purpose In this study, we studied 87 infants and young children in low-income families. The raw score of Bailey Baby Development scale (BSID - II) has been corrected. The study focused on the development of infants and young children in low-income families. Researchers say that in these low-income families, few studies investigate healthy babies and young children compared to slow-growing children.
And 30% of white babies and toddlers. Infants and young children with immigrant parents are more likely to live in low-income households than infants and children with homemade parents, 61% 40%. Half (51%) of infants and young children living in low-income households have at least one parent working full-time throughout the year. Some children are living in poverty, but poverty poses a major risk to the growth and development of children. (As explained in chapters 4 and 5, this risk will continue until pre-school and middle aged infancy.) Many of these children have not received adequate vaccination, many Mild illness has not been treated and raises the possibility of serious health problems. Many of these mild illnesses are easy to treat, so this phenomenon is particularly troublesome.
Men, infants and toddlers seem to tend to behave in poverty or high risk areas, and they tend to have more externalized behavioral problems (Holtz, Fox & Meurer, 2014). Low-income households face high risk of home and social pressure, such as unemployment, bad quality of childcare, poor supervision, unresolved medical problems, mental health problems of pregnant women, and dangerous communities I will. There is a bad influence. It is known to be related to the occurrence and deterioration of children's behavioral problems (Holtz, Fox & Meurer, 2014). Extensions to the above definition of externalization behavior can be called challenge behavior. These difficult behaviors may include losing your temperament, destroying property, refusing to listen, not complying, raising the level of attack (Holtz, Fox & Meurer, 2014).